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Medical practitioners who teach people how to meditate are often asked this question: “Which is the best meditation position?”Where Should You Meditate?
You can meditate almost anywhere: on the floor, sofa, bed, meditation bench, or chair. However, it is recommended that if you meditate on the floor, you should also use a yoga mat or blanket, especially if the floor is cold.If you meditate on a sofa or bed, ensure the furniture’s surface is not too soft; otherwise, you may “sink” into the sofa/bed during meditation.
Some people also use a meditation cushion, towel, or pillow. Some also recommend covering your legs with a blanket to keep warm.
What Are the Meditation Positions?
According to Naiwen Hu, an internationally renowned traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) doctor, different schools of practice have different ways of sitting in meditation and hand gestures.1. Full Lotus

The full lotus pose, also known as padmasana, is recommended by most of the experts interviewed, including Hu. It is a cross-legged sitting meditation position where each foot is placed on the opposite thigh.

When sitting in the full lotus position in meditation, “the energy in the Du meridian is in fast circulation,” said Gwo-Bin Wu, director of Xinhetang Chinese Medicine Clinic in Taiwan.

- Sit with your legs straight in front of you.
- Bend one knee (for example, the right knee), and put the foot of the same leg on the other thigh (for example, the left thigh).
- Pull the other foot up and place it on the thigh as symmetrically as possible.
- Soles face upward.
He explained since a lot of energy has been accumulated in the blocked areas, the impact of the force in these areas will also be significant, thus improving blood circulation. Better circulation will also boost immunity, as the blood flow transports our immune cells.
However, suppose you have leg or knee injuries, severe disc herniation, degenerative arthritis of the hip or knee joint, or femoral necrosis of the hip joint. In that case, you should consult your physician before accessing the full lotus position.
In addition, for beginners, being patient and entering the full lotus position slowly is recommended.
“Some people say that it hurts when they sit in the full lotus position,” Hu said, especially at the beginning. “But if you don’t try it, you will never experience the joy of meditation.” Collins-Perrica also said, “If you can overpower the discomfort of sitting in meditation after you get up and walk away, everything else in your day feels easy after that. Because it’s hard to do.”
2. Half Lotus Position

The half lotus position is a simpler variation of the full lotus pose.
3. Sukhasana or Easy (Loose) Pose

When accessing easy pose, or sukhasana, we simply sit with our legs crossed in front of our body.
Easy pose is used by most new meditation learners and many Westerners, as they find the first two poses quite tricky.
For example, clients of Ellen Wang, a certified functional nutritional counselor and neuro-therapist, cannot do the full-lotus position, as “it is too hard for most people.” Some of her clients can loosely cross their legs, while others cannot, and some meditate by sitting in a chair.
4. Other Positions
There are other variations of the lotus position, including the bound-lotus position and lotus headstand position, which yogis typically use.What Else Do You Need to Pay Attention to in Meditation?
1. Your Spine, Neck, and Back Must Be Straight
When sitting in meditation, you must sit upright to have a straight spine, back, and neck, said Wu, but still be relaxed.“Your spine will have a natural S curve, which is similar to that of the tai chi symbol,” he said. The tai chi symbol, also known as the yin-yang, is a circle divided into two halves, including a black half with a white dot in it and a white half with a black dot, with a curved line connecting both halves and forming a continuous circle. If your spine is slightly leaning forward, you will experience back pain after sitting for a long time because the energy will not be able to pass the meridians properly, and there’s also the issue of nerve compression. Even the narrow spaces between your intervertebral discs will become compressed, thus giving you a backache.
Wu also emphasized that when in meditation, you cannot extend your neck forward. Otherwise, the energy will become stuck in the neck area.
“So when you have a straight back and neck, this energy system is kept unimpeded.”
2. Breathing Styles
Different experts recommend different breathing styles.For instance, Russo recommends breathing with your belly instead of your chest. When teaching her clients how to meditate, she first observes their breathing styles and patterns.
Although Hu doesn’t think breathing style matters much during meditation, he concurs with Russo that abdominal breathing is the best.
3. Hand Gestures
If you’re not doing a specific cultivation or yoga practice, the average person practicing meditation can choose his or her hand positions and gestures.Certain religions and practices pay particular attention to hand gestures. These various hand gestures are called mudras.

The Dhyana mudra, also called the jieyin position, meaning “seal,” is a commonly used hand gesture in many religions/practices. When using this mudra, you rest one hand on the other, both palms up, and slightly lift both thumbs so they can touch each other’s tip.
The Dhyana mudra is also used in the sitting exercise of Falun Dafa, a spiritual practice rooted in Buddhist tradition and based on the principles of “Truth, Compassion, and Tolerance,” which practices a set of gentle exercises and meditation. Therefore, different meditation exercises may have specific mudras, and meditators should use the ones appropriate to their practices.
4. Eyes Open or Closed
According to the experts, many people meditate with their eyes closed for maximum tranquility and peacefulness.Meditation Can Be a Lifestyle
To Russo, meditation can be seen as a lifestyle. She suggests all meditators breathe correctly and have empathy, compassion, and a calm mind during meditation.“Breathing correctly, empathy, compassion, and having a calm state of mind. These are principles that we need to focus on throughout our day, whatever we’re doing,” she said.
According to Collins-Perrica, meditation should always bring you benefits regardless of the meditation position or hand gesture you use. She said that she had never met anyone who, after learning to meditate correctly, didn’t benefit from meditation.
However, some people may mistake relaxation exercises for meditation. Sometimes, people tell her that meditation didn’t work for them, and then she finds out that “it really wasn’t meditation, to begin with; it was actually relaxation exercises.”